| Alan Keenan on Sun, 14 Apr 2002 16:12:01 +0200 (CEST) |
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| [Nettime-bold] Hot Off the E-Presses: Chavez is Back |
Below find a fairly evenhanded report on a remarkable change in fortune.
Perhaps politics is still alive in Venezuela after all? If only "the
people" had been so alive, and lucky, in the US 18 months ago!
AK
Chavez reclaims Venezuelan
presidency
Associated Press
14 April 2002
Hugo Chavez was freed by his military captors and
returned to reclaim the Venezuelan presidency today,
greeting a cheering throng of supporters as he stepped
out of a helicopter, smiled and raised a fist in triumph.
Hundreds of people outside the palace in Caracas and
thousands in the street beyond began singing the
Venezuelan national anthem.
Chavez arrived at the Miraflores presidential palace
shortly after 3 a.m. in a dramatic restoration of power
following the resignation of Pedro Carmona, who
stepped down amid violent protests after just one day in
office as interim president.
Chavez's vice president, Diosdado Cabello, had
declared himself acting president until Chavez's return
from military custody.
Chavez's family, supporters and former government
officials insisted he never resigned as president, as
Carmona and Venezuela's high command have claimed.
"Today we are celebrating a new democracy," said one
man who took a microphone to greet Chavez.
The Organization of American States was sending a
delegation to Venezuela to assess the situation. The
OAS General Assembly planned to meet this week on
the crisis. Chavez is a former army paratrooper who led
a failed 1992 coup but was elected in 1998 on an
anti-poverty platform. His term was to end in 2006.
Chavez's attorney general, Isaias Rodriguez, told
Carmona's ministers they were under arrest pending
possible charges.
"They must take responsibility. They will be put on trial
with all their rights, but they will be put on trial,"
Cabello
said. Some military officials also would be tried for
military rebellion, he added.
Tens of thousands of people surrounded the presidential
palace Sunday after news of Carmona's resignation.
They set off powerful fireworks, awaiting Chavez's return
from military custody.
"Chavez is coming! Chavez is coming!" said Dario
Fereira, an unemployed man wearing a tattered shirt.
"The people want him back. He works for the poor."
Chavez administration officials ? many of whom had
evaded dozens of police raids under Carmona's brief
reign ? and loyalist military officers hugged each other in
the palace's marble-floored courtyard.
"In these past two days they have persecuted us," said
Rafael Ramirez, president of the state-run national
gasoline company.
Unshaved and with red-rimmed eyes, Ramirez said he
had hidden in friend's homes after Chavez's arrest on
Friday. Asked about the turnaround, Ramirez said: "It's
marvelous because the Venezuelan people responded
to this illegal coup attempt."
Chavez was kept on Orchila Island off the Venezuelan
coast before his return Sunday, his labor minister, Maria
Cristina Iglesias, said.
Carmona, a businessman and co-leader of a general
strike called last week that eventually led to Chavez's
ouster, was named president by the military high
command Friday, hours after generals arrested Chavez
for allegedly ordering gunmen to fire on a 150,000-strong
opposition protest on Thursday. Sixteen died and
hundreds were wounded in the melee.
Dozens more died in rioting and looting yesterday.
Caracas Mayor Alfredo Pena said at least nine people
were killed and 40 wounded Saturday. But an
Associated Press reporter witnessed dozens of bodies
at city hospitals.
"We have every right to protest, but they are gunning us
down out there," said Edgar Paredes, his clothes
soaked in blood as he brought his wounded brother to a
hospital. He didn't know who shot Luis, and probably
never will. Like most violent demonstrations here, gunfire
can erupt from any side, at any time.
Demonstrators supporting Chavez ? or opposed to the
way he was ousted ? forced Carmona to step down. The
commander of a strategic air base in the central city of
Maracay rebelled Saturday, setting in motion nationwide
protests demanding Chavez's return.
Thousands took to the streets, taking over state TV, to
demand that Chavez be reinstalled. Signaling a split in
the armed forces, several military commanders refused
to accept Carmona's appointment.
Some Latin American leaders denounced Friday's
irregular transition of power. The United States said
Chavez was responsible for his own ouster because of
attempts to violently suppress Thursday's demonstration.
The march capped a general strike called to support oil
executives who were protesting a Chavez-appointed
board of directors at the state oil monopoly Petroleos de
Venezuela.
A work slowdown by the executives severely cut
production and exports in Venezuela, the No. 3 oil
supplier to the United States.
At the palace, supporters displayed a huge poster of
Chavez lit by floodlights. A military brass band stood at
the ready. Red-bereted soldiers with automatic rifles
paced through the hallways; others pumped their fists
and egged on the crowd.
"Chavistas" seized the state-run TV station late
Saturday. Even as gunfire rattled downtown streets,
pro-Chavez lawmaker Juan Barreto praised the
"peaceful insurrection" that called for Chavez's return.
Carmona also lost the support of the 1 million-member
Venezuelan Workers Confederation, which co-led last
week's general strike, after Carmona decide to dissolve
Congress, said confederation director Jesus Urbietta.
Jesse Chacon, president of Venezuela's
telecommunications agency, said TV stations' conduct
last week will be investigated. Chacon condemned
stations that failed to cover protests against Chavez's
ouster and said they falsely depicted a calm Venezuela
to help the new regime.
At least 20 disturbances were reported in Caracas
yesterday. Unrest also was reported in the cities of
Maracay, Guarenas, Los Teques and Coro. Police
fought pitched battles with Chavez supporters in the
western Caracas slum of Catia, a Chavez stronghold.
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